- cross-posted to:
- nonpolitical_memes@lemmy.ml
- cross-posted to:
- nonpolitical_memes@lemmy.ml
I collect these into a database I run locally out of a bad habit I had as a teenager. Back in the AOL days you could ‘Email-bomb’ someone, and rightfully it sounds exactly like it is – you’d just send them tons and tons and tons of email.
Well, turns out - that’s pretty easy to detect and block. So I came up with a better way, a more permanent way; and probably the reason so many people see their email address as a private/privacy thing now – You simply submit their email address to every known spam address in existence.
Now, you’ve got an infinite amount of spam being thrown their way, 24/7, at super high volumes, for essentially - what is the entire lifetime of that account. I haven’t done it in the past 20 years or so, and I don’t have any of my old ‘progz’ for it, but I figure one day when I need it again, it will be invaluable.
Here’s how I solved email spam.
- Create a new email on a privacy focused platform (I chose proton)
- Sign up for an email relay service (Firefox relay, SimpleLogin, etc…)
- Only give out your actual email to friends and family and tell them not to share it with others or services without your permission.
- Change your email on ALL your services to a newly generated relay addresses. Only use relay addresses for any online service moving forward.
- Monitor the old email for a while to find any important services you might have missed.
- When you get spam from a relay address, you can decide to use the normal unsubscribe option, or the nuclear disable relay option. That’s it.
Bonus 01: since your changing all your services manually, you can decide to delete accounts you don’t need anymore.
Bonus 02: each relay is unique to the service so you can tell when a service either got hacked or sold your info.
Side Note: there are setups similar to this for credit cards. I use Wise.com for online transactions with 3 different “virtual” cards that I can destroy if they get exposed.
If you’re willing to pay for premium, Proton supports custom domains and catch-all addresses, so you can cut out all the extra mail relay stuff. Just give out vendor@mydomain.com, and it all comes back to the same mailbox. If it gets compromised, just set up a rule to trash anything to that address.
Types in email address:
“Unsubscribe’); DROP TABLE @ Email;–”
“Bobby Tables we like to call him”